The Moth - Love Hurts: Kemp Powers & Beth Bradley

Episode Date: February 12, 2021

This week, two stories of love, losing it and finding it again when you least expect it. This episode of The Moth Podcast is hosted by Dame Wilburn. Storytellers: Kemp Powers, Beth Bradley ...

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Attention Houston! You have listened to our podcast and our radio hour, but did you know the Moth has live storytelling events at Wearhouse Live? The Moth has opened Mike's storytelling competitions called Story Slams that are open to anyone with a five-minute story to share on the night's theme. Upcoming themes include love hurts, stakes, clean, and pride. GoodLamoth.org forward slash Houston to experience a live show near you. That's theMoth.org forward slash Houston. Welcome to the Moth Podcast. I'm your host for this week, Dame Wilburn. So much about Valentine's day is focused on popular, the gifts, the dinners, the guy
Starting point is 00:00:45 giving the flower to the girl, and to be clear, there's nothing wrong with all of that. But this week, our stories are about a deeper kind of love, when that persists beyond February 14th, and finds its way to us when we least expected. Our first storyteller is Kemp Powers. Kemp told this story at a grand slam in Los Angeles almost 10 years ago. The theme of the night was point of no return. Here's Kemp live at the month. I'm 37 years old and I wasn't really very good at much of anything in my 20s, at least of all marriage, but the decision to get a divorce wasn't an easy one.
Starting point is 00:01:36 It's interesting because for a lot of people, the legal tangle is what stops them from getting a divorce, but in my world, that wasn't really a big decision maker. It was because we had a daughter. And going through with that meant that on some level, I was going to be losing her, if not literally, then figuratively. So when people have a really bad breakup, it's not uncommon for one parent to be left feeling like basically their kid is better off without them.
Starting point is 00:02:07 And in my case, it wasn't very hard to convince me. To put it very simply, I really, really, really sucked at being a dad. When my daughter was a small infant, I swore that she was going to break some kind of record for falling out of bass and nets, falling out of cribs, falling out of beds, and it always seemed to happen when I was the one that was watching her. And I was hardly ever around. I traveled so much for work, and in the rare occasions that I was there, any effort that I made to try to bond
Starting point is 00:02:37 with, I always seemed to backfire. I bought her this when she was three months old. I bought her this gangly little puppet that I named Sanchez after my favorite reggae dance hall singer. And she was really in the Sesame Street, so I really thought that this puppet was going to bring her a lot of joy.
Starting point is 00:02:57 Instead, it terrified her. And from there, things just continued to get worse. I mean by the time when she was six months old, I decided that it was really smart for her to know that fire was dangerous and it was something that she should stay away from. So one day when I was making a cup of tea, I picked her up, holding her in one hand
Starting point is 00:03:18 in the hot kettle in the other. I explained very carefully that you should never, ever, ever touch hot things because they could hurt you. At least I did in my mind, because in reality, by the time I got to the word touch, she'd already reached out and grabbed the bottom of the steaming kettle and burned herself. So by the time my daughter was one years old, I was already pretty much afraid to be left alone with her. She suffered from a fibral seizure at 18 months and vomited in the middle of
Starting point is 00:03:45 the night and inhaled it, almost choking the death. She was in the hospital for a week. And I remembered looking at her in that incubator with the tubes up her nose and the butterfly IV in her hand and thinking to myself, dude, you're just going to fucking get somebody killed. And so I didn't fight because I didn't really think I had any right to. I didn't fight the incredibly restrictive visitation rights that I had. I didn't fight when her mother asked for my approval to relocate to Phoenix.
Starting point is 00:04:16 And I didn't even fight when the visitation that we did agree upon fell by the wayside because at the end of the day, they were too busy. And their life out there for her to keep up with her schedule of visitation in Los Angeles. So my friends, they were really supportive, but they weren't really able to offer me any counsel.
Starting point is 00:04:35 It was this really bizarre twist that we had all grown up in this world where divorce was just a fact of life. But suddenly, I found myself in this adult world where every single family that I knew was nuclear. It was like we were suddenly back in the 50s, only I didn't have to drink out of a separate water fountain and I didn't have to worry about getting lynched from having had a kid with a white lady.
Starting point is 00:04:57 But every single person that I knew my age was either so happily married that it bordered on kind of sickening or so relentlessly single that it bordered on kind of sickening, or so relentlessly singled that it bordered on parity. And my friends love me, and I love them too, but to all of them, to the friends who were married, I was basically that single guy that they could live vicariously through. And to the ones who were single, I was the divorcee with all the responsibility that proved to them
Starting point is 00:05:24 that them not having any kids and not getting married have been the right decision to make. So, I basically went on with my life and got used to the routine that we had. That was all I really had. The sporadic phone calls, the grudging pickups that happened at the halfway point between Los Angeles and Phoenix in an aptly named shit hole of a town called Desert Center. It was a barren place filled with more
Starting point is 00:05:49 scorpions and dust devils than people. And our drives out of the desert my daughter and I hardly ever spoke and I was pretty glad about that because not talking meant that I never really had to explain why we were in the situation that we were in. So one day back in March I get this telephone call early in the situation that we were in. So one day back in March, I get this telephone call early in the morning, and it's from my daughter. And I'm pretty surprised because she almost never calls me. When I answer, she's distraught. She's crying.
Starting point is 00:06:15 She says, Dad, a tsunami has just destroyed Japan, and it's heading for California. You need to get out of bed right now and get to a high point immediately. Now, initially, I just had to assure her that there was no chance that the title wave was going to wash away Korea town anytime soon. But she was still too worried to be calmed down, so to assuage her fears, I had to talk to her. And we talked. We talked about her piano lessons. We talked about her upcoming 13th birthday. We talked about her
Starting point is 00:06:45 now six-year-old brother who lived with me, who she missed dearly, and we talked about me, who she missed just as much. It turned out that she still had her puppet sandshes, which she hung on the wall next door a bed. When my daughter's 13th birthday came around, we made a pact. Going forward, we would speak every Sunday at 12 p.m. No matter where we were. And when we spoke, she would get to ask me one question. It didn't matter what the question was, I had to give her the answer. And this was something that made me a little bit nervous,
Starting point is 00:07:15 because I was finally going to be held accountable for something. When the first question came, it was what was my favorite book. After that, it was what was my favorite movie. A week later, what was my favorite song. And as the weeks turned in the months, these questions revolved about the things I'd done, the places I'd been, and how I was living my life. My daughter is 13 years old, and five foot 10 inches tall.
Starting point is 00:07:40 But I can still pick her up, and I can still hold her in my arms. We talk every week now, and when I hold her, every time that I see her up and I can still hold her in my arms. We talk every week now and when I hold her every time that I see her and when I do, I just make sure that I keep that hot kettle just a little bit out of reach. Thank you. That was Kemp Powers. Kemp Powers is a playwright, director, screenwriter,
Starting point is 00:08:08 and occasional bird watcher. He says he was a very angry and cynical young man who inexplicably grew into a happy and optimistic adult. Kemp is the co-director and co-writer of soul and the playwright and screenwriter of One Night in Miami. The play and now film details the fictionalized meaning of Brother Malcolm, Muhammad Ali, Jim Brown, and Sam Cook at the Hampton House in February of 1964. You can watch it now on Amazon Prime. Up next this week is Beth Bradley.
Starting point is 00:08:43 Beth told this story at a story slam in Denver where the theme of the night was Love Hurts. Here's Beth, live at the mouth. So it was a Tuesday night, and I was in the market for frozen pizza. I happened to be at the fancy natural grocery store and as such their pizza options were pretty grim. So there were lots of things involving like pretend cheese or cauliflower, things of that nature. So I'm kind of like glumly perusing the options and I happen upon one that appears
Starting point is 00:09:25 to have actual pizza ingredients in it. And it's called home run. But immediately my reflex was, I can't get that one. And so I kept looking, but then I took a second and I was like, why did I just decide that? And I realized that the last time I had it was in Seattle, my ex-boyfriend had brought it over for dinner one night, and I remember him just being like very impressed with the quality, and also likewise with himself for having purchased it.
Starting point is 00:09:58 And so the thing with my ex-boyfriend is that the whole time we were together, he was battling an alcohol addiction, and that's why we had to break up. And then in March, the worst thing that could possibly happen happened, and he died because of it. So that's why I can't get this pizza. And as I'm thinking about that, I'm realizing like I've been doing these other little things that are kind of similar, like in an unconscious way, like he loved that show The Unbreakable Camille Schmidt. And I do too, but I can't watch any of the episodes that he hasn't been able to watch. Or like, I used to go, we used to take my dog on nature walks
Starting point is 00:10:48 near his house, and he always referred to us as the nature rangers, and which I liked, because I thought of like third graders wearing like ranger hats or something. So even though two of the three nature rangers are still here, like I've retired the name, and I don't ever think of it that way anymore so I'm still in the frozen food aisle and
Starting point is 00:11:12 just like rudely blocking the pizzas from everyone else and I'm like starting to tear up, you know and like cry a little bit and I've spent like a lot of time in the past year like thinking about grief, being in grief, studying grief, but this pizza aisle crying stage of grief feels like when I didn't read about and it feels new and I'm trying to figure out why. So I think it's like when you lose somebody to an addiction, like there's obviously a lot of sorrow with that, but there's also like blame and guilt and regret and anger. And it just feels like poison, sometimes like carrying that stuff around with you.
Starting point is 00:12:08 And it's like where I just want to forget it happened, you know. And so sometimes I'm mad at me, sometimes I'm mad at him, sometimes I'm mad at other people he knew, and sometimes I'm just mad at the world that it happened. But, it's like, in this moment, all this time I've spent wanting to forget him, instead, I'm remembering this pizza, and I'm remembering the nature-rangers and Kimmy Schmidt, and it's like, I know that the reason I'm not doing these things is not coming from like that anger or that guilt. It's something different. And it's like after all this time, I want to like have a connection to him. I want some solidarity with him. And that feels new. And that feels different. Like if you can't have this pizza, then neither can I. And so I think about some of the things
Starting point is 00:13:17 that I've learned about grief. And like one of the things I've learned is that you kind of have to let it happen to you. Like you have to let it change you the way that it's going to. And if this is, I've looked for healing like in the mountains or in churches, but if healing's going to find me in the grocery store, pizza aisle, I'll take it, you know?
Starting point is 00:13:45 And maybe someday I will eat these pizzas again or I'll watch Kimmy Schmidt. But for now, it feels like the right thing to do to remember him like after trying to detangle my story from his disconnect from him, like this is something I can do to stay connected to him. And even though it's not like a monument or a plaque, or something monumental that to come back to,
Starting point is 00:14:24 it's like, I think that if he knew that my healing and memory of him were pizza-based, like he loved pizza, and he loves laughing, and I think that he would crack up, and I think he would love it. That was Beth Bradley. Beth is a marketing content director who lives in Denver. She loves dogs, hiking, and adventures of all kinds. Beth says she's been telling stories since she could talk and listening to them off since she was a teenager. She's proud to say she's won two slams
Starting point is 00:15:06 and come in second at the Denver Grand Slam twice. You can check out a photo of Beth and her beloved dog, Ember, at our website, the moth.org slash extras. This Valentine's Day, we hope you'll take time to celebrate all the different kinds of love in your life. Most people who listen to them off know how I met my wife, but what they haven't heard is how I met my platonic soulmate. He and I went to college together, and we met the way most college people meet during a kegger. I stepped off the tailgate of the pickup truck and fell into mark.
Starting point is 00:15:44 From then on, we've just been connecting. I stepped off the tailgate of the pickup truck and fell into mark. From then on, we've just been connecting. The pandemic has been difficult for us. We don't get together as much as we used to, but we do keep in touch by sharing song lyrics. Our favorite one comes from Van Morrison's sweet thing. I shall drive my chariot down your streets and cry. Hey, it's me. I'm Dynamite, and I don't know why.
Starting point is 00:16:16 If you have a story about love, any kind of love, consider throwing your name in the head at one of our virtual story slams. The theme for the month of February is Love Hurts. For more upcoming themes, details and tickets head to our website, themoth.org slash events. That's all for us this week. Until next time, from all of us here at The Moth, have a story worthy week. Happy Valentine's Day. Dame Wilburn is a long-time host and storyteller with the Moth. She's also the host of the podcast, Dame's Eclectic Brain.
Starting point is 00:16:54 This episode of the Moth podcast was produced by me, Julia Purcell, with Sarah Austin-Gines and Sarah Jane Johnson. The rest of the Moth's leadership team includes Catherine Burns, Sarah Haberman, Jennifer Hickson, Meg Bulls, Kate Tellers, Jennifer Birmingham, Marina Klucce, Suzanne Rust, Brandon Grant, Inga Godowski, and Aldi Kaza. Moth stories are true as remembered and affirmed by storytellers. For more about our podcast, information on pitching your own story
Starting point is 00:17:22 and everything else, go to our website, TheMoth.org. TheMoth podcast is presented by PRX, the Public Radio Exchange, helping make public radio more public at prx.org.

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